114 Tenn. 361 | Tenn. | 1904
delivered the opinion of the Court.
This suit is brought by Peter Harris, a former justice of the peace of Cumberland county, against W. A. Hamby, judge of the county court of that county, and involves the constitutionality of an act of the general assembly passed April 1, 1903 (Laws 1903, p. 1563, c. 599) for the purpose of redistricting Cumberland county, the effect of which was to deprive complainant of his office.
The statute is as follows;
“An act to create and establish four civil districts in*363 the county of Cumberland in lieu of the thirteen civil districts, now existing; to define the boundaries of the same, and to abolish certain offices in said county and to provide for the election of their successors.
“Section 1. — Be it enacted by the general assembly of the State of Tennessee, that, there are hereby created and established for the county of Cumberland, four civil districts in lieu of the thirteen civil districts now existing therein.
“Section 2. — Be it further enacted, that, the boundaries of said new civil districts shall be as follows: Boundaries of the second and fifth civil districts shall be consolidated and shall hereafter be known as the first civil district.
“Second, the territory now embraced within the boundaries of the first, sixth and thirteenth civil districts shall be consolidated and shall hereafter be known as the second civil district.
“Third, that the territory now embraced within the boundaries of the third, fourth, eighth and eleventh civil districts shall be consolidated and shall hereafter be known as the third civil district.
“Fourth, that the territory now embraced in the seventh, ninth, tenth and twelfth civil districts shall be combined and shall hereafter be known as the fourth civil district.
“Section 3. — Be it further enacted, that, all the various district officers, to wit, justices of the peace, constables and tax assessors, now holding offices in said
*364 county, are hereby abolished, and the county board of election commissioners shall call an election to be held, according to law for the election of two justices of the peace, one constable and one tax assessor, in all the new districts created, except in the first wherein shall be elected three justices. Said election shall be opened and held at the various voting precincts, in said county on the 7th day of May, 1903, and the present district officers in said county shall hold their offices until the officers herein provided for have been elected and qualified.
“Section 4. — Be it further enacted, that, the voting precincts in the various civil districts in said county shall remain as they now stand.
“Section 5. — Be it further enacted, that, this act take effect from and after the 7th day of May, 1903, the public welfare requiring it.”
The objection now made to this act is that both the title and the body of it embrace two subjects, viz., redistricting Cumberland county and the abolition of certain offices in that county, and that in this it contravenes article 2, section 17, of the constitution, providing that “no bill shall become a law which embraces more than one subject, that subject to be expressed in the title.”
This contention cannot be sustained. We do not think that either the title or the body of this statute embraces two subjects. If the title did — and complainant seems to press this point with more confidence against it than the body of the act — it would be immaterial. The con
But neither the bill nor caption embrace two subjects.
The purpose and object of the statute is to redistrict and reorganize Cumberland county. The first section abolishes all the old districts and creates four new ones, and the second defines their boundaries.
The inevitable legal consequence of abolishing the old districts was the destruction of all the offices of justices of the peace, constable, and tax assessor in them. These offices were absolutely dependent upon the dis^ tricts for their existence, and when the districts were abolished they were, by operation of the law, destroyed. Grainger Comity v. State, 111 Tenn., 234, 80 S. W., 756-763.
There can be no officer without an office to be filled; and when the offices of justice of the peace, constable, and tax assessor of the old districts ceased to exist the official life of the complainant and the other officers of those districts terminated. State v. Gaines, 2 Lea, 316; State v. Lindsay, 103 Tenn., 625, 53 S. W., 950; Judges’ Cases, 102. Tenn., 509, 53 g. W., 134.
The chief attack evidently intended to be made and urged against the constitutionality of this statute when this bill was filed was that the complainant and other district officers of the county could not be deprived of their offices before the expiration of the constitutional terms for which they were elected indirectly by abolishing their districts, but it is now conceded that since then this question has been decided adversely to this contention in the cases of Grainger County v. State, 111 Tenn., 284, 80 S. W., 750, and State v. Akin, 112 Tenn., 603, 79 S. W., 805.
It is held, in effect, in these cases, that the general assembly, in the exercise of its power over the affairs of counties and municipalities, may abolish existing civil districts of counties and create others at will, and that when a district is abolished all the offices for it cease to exist with it; and the official life of those holding them is immediately ended, in the absence of a saving clause like that contained in this statute, providing that they shall hold their offices until others for the new districts are elected and qualified.
This statute seems to be without constitutional objection, and valid and effective to abolish all the civil
The decree of the chancellor and the court of chancery appeals so adjudging is affirmed.